OK, I’ll come clean: all contribute–but not equally. Far from it. Some are more important than others.

So, what contributes most? Before reading on, try rank ordering the list from least to most influential.

Now watch the brief video (If you are one of those that don’t want to try, or can’t wait to know the answer, just scroll past video).

Answer: the items as written are presented in order from the least to most influential, the last three being far more important to living a long and healthy life. Distinct from the other items on the list, personal sense of meaning, close interpersonal relationships, and social integration form the core of “well-being.”

Given such findings, it is more than a bit curious that the field of mental health and majority of its supporting research are organized around reducing symptoms. Perhaps this is one reason why, as psychiatrist Robert Cloninger persuasively argues, the profession has, “failed to improve the average levels of happiness and well-being in the general population, despite vast expenditures on psychotropic drugs and psychotherapy manuals.” Indeed, by all measures, mental health is on the decline.

Could it be that our field has the formula for improving health and well-being backwards? Instead of focusing on reducing problems or eliminating symptoms maybe we should be working directly on improving people’s personal sense of meaning, close interpersonal relationships, and social integration.

The evidence is compelling. In addition to a longer, healthier life, improved well-being leads to:

Most exciting of all, use of the tool is serving as the impetus for many new innovations in mental health service delivery. I just spent a week with teams from Slagelse municipality in Denmark who are now using the data generated from routine use of the ORS to transform service delivery at every level. My Scandinavian co-teacher, psychologist Susanne Bargmann will be talking about these new and exciting developments at this summer’s FIT Implementation and Training of Trainers workshops. Is it any wonder that Denmark consistently LEADS the world in well-being?

While you were celebrating the Holidays–shopping and spending time with family–government officials were busy at work. On December 28th, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services (SAMHSA) sent a formal termination notice to the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices (NREPP).

Ho, ho, oh no…!

Briefly, NREPP is “an evidence-based repository and review system designed to provide the public with reliable information on mental health and substance use interventions.” In plain English, it’s a government website listing treatment approaches that have scientific support. SAMHSA is the Federal Agency overseeing behavior health policy.

As someone whose work was vetted by NREPP, I can personally vouch for the thoroughness of the process and the integrity of the reviewers. No favors were sought and none were given. More, while no one knows exactly what will happen in the future, I sincerely believe officials leading the change have the best of intentions. What I am much less certain of is whether science will finally prevail in communicating “what works” in mental health and substance abuse to the public.

You have a bacterial infection, antibiotics are the solution. A virus? Well, you are just going to have to tough it out. Take an aspirin and get some rest–and no, the brand you choose doesn’t really matter. Ask a friend or relative, and they likely have a favorite. The truth is, however, it doesn’t matter which one you take: Bayer, Econtin, Bufferin, Alka-Selzter, Anacin, a hundred other names, they’re all the same!

Four decades of research shows psychotherapy works much more like aspirin than an antibiotic. Despite claims, its effects are not targeted nor specific to particular diagnoses. Ask a friend, relative, your therapist or workshop presenter, and they all have their favorite: CBT, IPT, DBT, PD, TFT, CRT, EMDR, four-hundred additional names. And yet, meta-analytic studies of head-to-head comparisons find no meaningful difference in outcome between approaches.

What does all this mean for the future of NREPP and SAMHSA? The evidence makes clear that, when it comes to psychotherapy, any “list” of socially sanctioned approaches is not only unscientific, but seriously misleading. Would it be too much to hope that future governmental efforts stop offering a marketplace for manufacturers of different brands of aspirin and focus instead on fostering evidence-based practice (EBP)?

Really, it’s not a bridge too far. It merely means putting policies in place that help practitioners and agencies live up to the values inherent in the definition of EBP accepted by all professional organizations and regulatory bodies; namely, “the integration of the best available research with with clinical expertise in the context of patient characteristics, culture, and preferences” (pp. 273, APA, 2006).

P.S.: Every other year, the ICCE sponsors the “Training of Trainers” intensive. Over three days, we focus on helping you become a world class presenter and trainer. Join me, and colleagues from around the world for this transformational event.

Two scales I developed met the new standard. Both are listed on the Joint Commission and SAMSHA websites. The Outcome and Session Rating Scales (ORS, SRS) are brief, well-validated tools in use in clinical settings around the world.

The new standard has the potential to significantly improve the effectiveness and efficiency of care. Studies also show, however, that implementation is a complex process with many challenges. Indeed, despite significant investment of time and resources, many organizations fail.

Click here for a free handout to assess the readiness of your agency. It’s one of the many resources provided at the ICCE Feedback-Informed Treatment Implementation workshop—the only evidence-based implementation training on measurement-based care to receive perfect marks for implementation materials, training and support resources, and quality assurance procedures by the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices (NREPP).